Beloved cat still a part of Loretta Sanchez’s wacky holiday card
- Share via
Friends and constituents of Rep. Loretta Sanchez will get one more year of holiday joy from the congresswoman’s fluffy cat Gretzky.
For nearly a decade, Sanchez and the Himalayan cat have co-starred in a wacky holiday card that is mailed each year to friends and voters by the Garden Grove Democrat’s reelection campaign. The ritual seemed likely to end this year: Gretzky died in November 2010, prompting Sanchez to put out a call for new ideas for a “fresh holiday tradition.”
But after posting a poll to her website last month, Sanchez concluded that she had to find a way to bring Gretzky back.
PHOTOS: Sanchez and Gretzky over the years
Voters were asked to choose among a list of options for a theme, including “totally traditional,” “surf’s up,” and “happy trails.”
“There’s one person who said, ‘Just make it crazy like you always do,’” Sanchez said. But the overwhelming response was: “We want Gretzky!”
This year’s card features Sanchez and her new husband, retired Army Col. Jack Einwechter, posing with gifts. Behind them stands a tree decorated with ornaments featuring Gretzky’s downy face.
In a nod to the Occupy Wall Street movement, the card’s message reads: “In this season of giving, may the joy of the holidays occupy 100% of your heart.”
“It’s a new beginning because we’re introducing Jack,” Sanchez said of her new husband, whom she wed in July. “It’s sort of a transition.”
Gretzky has appeared in every card since 2002. The 2008 card – “Cruisin’ into the New Year” – featured Gretzky and Sanchez riding a motorcycle, with Gretzky sporting a bandanna. Gretzky wore a goalie mask in 2007, in honor of the Anaheim Ducks, who won the Stanley Cup that year.
Last year, the holiday card featured a montage of past Gretzky appearances to mark the death of the beloved cat.
More to Read
Get the L.A. Times Politics newsletter
Deeply reported insights into legislation, politics and policy from Sacramento, Washington and beyond. In your inbox three times per week.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.